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Category Archives: Religious

St Maeve’s : Sacraments

05 Monday Oct 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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religious nostalgia, St Maeve's

Confession as it was seems to have barely survived. Crowds like Harrod’s sale at Easter and Christmas, of course, as before. But unlike before, many fewer clients, I think, on a Saturday night. We may, of course, all be better people. We may have simply outgrown trivialising the Sacrament .It is certainly a phenomenon which is well worth a careful study. Could it be that general absolution may well have to be introduced due to shortage of priests? If so, of course, the problem of that rather complex notion which calls for individual confession later will solve itself.
We certainly cannot blame the confessional manner of. today’s priests .There were always priests who could handle it, and others who seemed to think they were speaking for themselves and not Christ. They were soon identified by the empty seats outside. The lesson that it’s supposed to help people back in and not chase them away seems to have been learned. Confession still survives in Hollywood and American TV, both of which have instinctively identified with the dramatic potential of the confessional, and they usually get it right. For some reason- take your pick- the BBC fights shy of it.
The only thing missing for me in the traditional film confession and the climactic impact of the shutter rattling back, and the profile of the priest behind the grille is the tension of putting fingers in ears before this, to avoid hearing the confession from the other side .Inevitably there were those who used the confessor as a patient might use a psychiatrist, to the irritation of those waiting to have their pot scraped, as the expression was. My uncle received some very disapproving tut-tuts from those around him once when, after an inordinately long wait, there was a clunking sound from the confessional, and the priest burst out of his side to run to the sacristy to get a glass of water for a lady who had fainted. My uncle’s theory that he had gone for the police did not go down too well with some others in the line.
My fourth Sacrament, Confirmation, called for a slightly larger blue suit and a red sash. It may have been the war, but I have always felt that some of the natural effervescence of that sacrament was lost at the time, or did not get through to me. But then, its life-affirming dynamic-and that of the Holy Spirit-did not then and does not now seem to be emphasised enough either. I do remember from the Acts of the Apostles being highly impressed by its transformation of the apostles, cowering in their hideyhole into the force which was to transform the entire middle eastern world, in historical terms, in a matter of years.
Battle-hardened veterans of the long walk up the aisle to the toffee-coloured marble altar rails after the First Communion, we were not that concerned about Confirmation as such. The problem was the cuff. Again, oddly enough, the idea that the Sacrament gave the ability to have, or at least be aware of, the courage needed to face change, is something which seems to have taken less precedence. It was highlighted in the Sacrament by a tap on the cheek from the Archbishop. Rumours of this, life being what it is, were passed on to us from the year ahead. Heart-rending tales of stunning punches and blows were suddenly part of our daily fears. Regrettably, all that tended to be remembered about the conferring of this sacrament- arguably the third most important-I’ll leave that with you-was the tap. This did, however, provide one of the most agile adjustments to a situation I have ever come across.
For some time after the war, St Mungo’s Academy, the gigantic Glasgow secondary school which was Glasgow’s oldest, had so many Second Year classes after the post-war baby boom that it had four annexes. One of them was so rigorous in ambience that it was claimed that it had been designed to house German POWs during the war, but the Nazis had invoked the Geneva Convention , and had threatened reprisals. It was constantly under siege by the local inhabitants, and had, at any time, three sets of brass toilet fittings, coveted for their scrap value- one in use, one just stolen and one an evidence production in Tobago Street Police Station. A little later it obviously had about as many former pupils as New Zealand had inhabitants in the first decade of the century, and decided to open a club. It bought an enormous house in Great Western Road from a brilliant local English eccentric called A.E. Pickard.
The club house had a superb marble staircase,which had attracted the attention of a group making a short film about the trial and execution of St John Ogilvie, the Jesuit martyred at Glasgow Cross. A lady acquaintance, unaware of this, was visiting the club with a non-Catholic friend, and entered to find various dignitaries, dressed in seventeenth century costume coming down the marble staircase. Before she could say a word, a man dressed as a Catholic priest was dragged out in front of her, and skelped across the coupon by the most dignified of the dignitaries with a punch which John Wayne or even Joel McCrea would have been proud of, leaving him taking a count at the foot of the staircase. Her friend looked at her, certainly perplexed, and possibly askance. With the speed of light she replied, “Don’t worry about that- they must be rehearsing for our Sacrament of Confirmation,” and swept into the bar.
There was a particularly good legend about a tough boy who had put up two fists to the Bishop after the tap, and the classmate in front of me was capable of it. But I was so disappointed when he reneged on this that I don’t remember mine at all.

Our St Maeve’s expert, perhaps feeling guilty about the popularity of his contributions on this site, insists that we remind you that nostalgia is a form of intellectual cancer. As he points out, as a means of providing the Eucharist the traditional parish with celibate staff served its purpose. But that was then. This is now !

Oh to be a bishop, now that the Catholic Spring is here !

27 Sunday Sep 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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elderly bishops, the bishops'perspectives

The Scottish bishops must, of course, ensure that the paedophile problem can never happen again. There are many reasons why this will be very difficult.
Firstly, there is the selection of candidates for the Tridentine priesthood on the grounds of “vocation”. A nebulous concept at best, this- and its accurate assessment – can hardly be said to have functioned with any degree of efficiency, as we have seen here and elsewhere. The world-wide lack of applicants for the priesthood may well have solved this problem for them.
Secondly, the cover-ups involved leads one to question the efficiency of bishops in 2015. Appointment to a diocese puts a bishop in charge of staff, organisations, property and finances. He will obviously, in most cases, seek efficient professional help . But he may have been in a seminary from the age of 13 or so, beginning a process of insulation from the wear and tear of practical experience of the world for which no amount of hearing confessions – nowadays less common in any case- can ever compensate. As a CEO, his is a lifetime dedication to an institution with important values, functioning within an environment which surrounds him with the conventions of absolute power and unswerving obedience, even with a traditional mode of address and uniform .CEOs in other professions are aware of the possibility of life-changing scenarios like office coups d’etat, economic downturns and the commercial devastation which can occur overnight from new and unexpected scientific discoveries. They will also have undergone some kind of professional training. This is likely to prove generally more valuable than a bishop’s extensive though narrow theological studies, although data on the learning transfer value of this is lacking.
Thirdly, it is a job for life. As Dr Johnson points out ”When a man knows he is to be hanged…it concentrates the mind wonderfully”. The sacking of a bishop, until very recently in Germany, is unheard of, and the world’s bishops, and not just those of Scotland, certainly show a lack of concentration, not merely where paedophile priests are concerned, but also where Pope Francis’s exhortations to permit extended ordination are involved.
Fourthly, inevitably, the perspective of a bishop in 2015 is more likely to be skewed than not, especially as he is functioning within a thousand year old tradition , although in other professions with an old or older tradition like medicine an efficient change of perspective has , if eventually, been made. To be unable accurately to gauge the distaste for and resentment of ordinary Catholics and their priests at their betrayal by paedophiles , and to ignore this and cover it up is a sign of distorted perspective.
Lastly, old men predominate at episcopal level. Old age dislikes change, and it dislikes hurry. Younger people rightly feel they are not understood by the elderly , especially today, when the pace of change is at breakneck speed.
These factors undoubtedly make the lives of our bishops difficult , and we can have some sympathy for them, not that they would necessarily appreciate this. But they are factors they will have to keep in mind if the Church is to move on into a new era, and a China-dominated and Islam-pervaded era at that.

Lanarkshire and China

20 Sunday Sep 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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Archbishop Hon Tai-Fai, Chinese Bishops, Scottish clerical behaviour

We have three things to say this week.
Firstly, this blog is really about the importance of getting the Eucharist to China, which we have to approach by getting our bishops to accept extended ordination as Pope Francis has asked them to do , as this will be the only way in which the Eucharist can be provided as quickly as possible for China’s millions.
But we can’t get peace to get on with it because of the nightmare scenes and distortion of reality at the end of the Tridentine priesthood in Scotland. This week, it’s a priest “stalking” to quote a local newspaper a young man of 29, asking him to come for a meal, etc. Now that’s obviously bad anywhere. You won’t believe this next bit. This fruit of the clerical training system in Scotland actually said he thought the young man reminded him of an altar boy he had known. You wouldn’t get away with that as part of an anti-religious skit in an atheist pantomime. But we have to live with it. At the minute.
Secondly, a bit about China at last. The ‘Tablet’ international Catholic magazine had an interview with Archbishop Hon Tai-Fai Chinese secretary of the Vatican’s Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples. Now here’s a lad who would fit beautifully into things here. ‘At certain times and places the Pope has had to allow local rulers to nominate bishops. But that was all in the past ‘ he says. True enough, Hon. The time span , however, is more worthy of note than you feel like giving it. Most people would agree that from the Concordat of Worms in 1120 up to 1917, and I quote ’Many kings and other secular authorities continued largely to exercise a right of appointment or at least of veto until the second half of the nineteenth century. ‘ In 1829, in the past right enough, the Pope could only appoint 24. (see Eamon Duffy, ‘Faith of Our Fathers’ ‘ Papal Authority’ chapter, page 73. ) In other words, any European Emperor or King, or tinpot Margrave or Duke, could appoint bishops until 98 years ago, but not now the mightiest country in the world ? With a name like his, the Archbishop should know the meaning of ‘face’. He certainly knows the meaning of ‘brass neck’.
There’s more. ‘The vast majority of Chinese Catholics now want communion with the Holy Father and to have him choose their bishops.’ Notice how ‘communion with the Holy Father ‘ and having him’ choose their bishops ‘ are equated , and ridiculously given equal weight. (He may not know much Church history, but he’s obviously done media studies at some point). The number of Chinese Catholics is estimated at 14 million, ‘most dynamic in local underground communities ‘. But our man says ‘the vast majority’ would rather see Canon 329 of Canon Law , Papal approval of bishops, implemented You can just imagine them dancing about with paper lanterns and dummy dragons , saying ‘We want Canon 329 implemented’, in a variety of dialects. In other words , according to him, they would rather have that than the full spiritual life they would have with their own validly ordained bishops, and above all with the Eucharist, as Christ asked. We particularly like the airy ’the vast majority’. Did he conduct a poll of all 40 million , in their underground communities? If he did, he’ll get a job in customer research any time. Otherwise, why should he say it ? What is there about the appointment to episcopal level which makes the rest of us seem uninformed or simply daft?
Will this interview with the ’Tablet’ be a pivotal moment for future church historians in discussing the complete uselessness of the Curia in the world of 2015 ? Who knows? Even we can only speculate.
Oh, and our third point. Many Scottish dioceses are embarking on a drive for vocations to the Tridentine priesthood , instead of acting on the Pope’s comments on extending ordination. And don’t forget our first point.
Wherever you are , think of us here.

Where do our bishops come from.Or are coming from ?

13 Sunday Sep 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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We mention bishops here a bit. Not everybody seems to know where they come from.
A short leet is kept in the safe at headquarters. When the bishop dies, or whatever, the Papal Delegate or Nuncio appears. He talks to a lot of clerics, also ‘lay persons of outstanding wisdom’. The Papal Delegate then makes up a shorter leet, of three, and then goes more deeply into how good a bishop they will make for Drumchapel or Dundee or Drumnadrochit or whereever . He then makes up a final group, called a ‘ terna’ and sends it to his bosses, the Congregation for Bishops with his conclusions, , to see if they think there’s a good bishop for Drumchapel, etc, in there, thence to the Pope to okay it or not.
The Congregation or the Pope can tell the Papal Delegate to forget it and start again, but information about this level is difficult to get. We have read that two suggestions at shorter leet level for one Scottish position were knocked back for being too young, but that’s all we’ve found out. Nor have we ever heard who has qualified as a ‘lay person of outstanding wisdom’. For various reasons, we might even offer a small prize for suggestions .
In accordance with Canon Law 1917, the Papal Nuncio is obviously the man. Archbishop Mennini, the current holder, is obviously a nice enough fellow, if a little tardy in replying to our recorded delivery letter in 2014 , and is certainly in with the bricks. Wikipideia says he comes from a ‘family that has strong links with the Holy See’. He was ordained by one cardinal, and consecrated by another two , and has been appointed Nuncio to Bulgaria, Russia and Uzbekistan, before coming to Britain in 2010. He hasn’t necessarily been to all the Scottish episcopal consecrations since then, but he’s been to a few . Before him, many of these were carried out by Cardinal O’Brien. Well anyway, an interesting co-consecrator of Archbishop Tartaglia was Archbishop Raymond Burke. Now there’s a character for you is Cardinal Raymond Burke, as he is now. Apart from being a very stylish dresser indeed, he is likely to be in the headlines this week as the Synod begins.
So there you are. Now you know where our Scottish bishops come from. You may be able, in fact, to deduce where they are coming from .
Anyway, this Synod is in some ways a distraction from the world-wide shortage of those allowed to provide the Eucharist to the hundreds of thousands who have to go without. We are sure that it will not prevent our Scottish bishops from the careful consideration of Pope Francis’s request to think about extending ordination , especially since the announcement of parish closures, unnecessary otherwise, must surely be in the pipeline.

Apology, Please

06 Sunday Sep 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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Scottish priest child abuse, Scttish bishops

46 6 12
It’s been a fortnight since Archbishop Tartaglia apologised to the 46 victims of church abuse between 2006 and 2012. It is now time for the Scottish bishops to continue the apology process.
Obviously on many occasions and at different times assessment of the six year clerical training period has been an abject failure. We don’t know how many cases are child abuse or homosexual in nature. We do know now- fairly recently – that a reason for joining the priesthood can be to get at children , although this may not have been appreciated earlier. If the six year course is just a celibacy test, since the extensive study of theology is ultimately pointless since irrelevant to parish work, obviously what attention was paid was to Being Careful About The Women. And the vocation nonsense has not helped. We all know cases where vocation, if genuine, withered and died before a meaningless ordination , although few if any resulted in paedophily.
Mistakes were made, and child abusers were sent to parishes. Worse- much worse- when found out they were sent to other parishes.
To look back to years of receiving the Sacraments – and being chided from the pulpit – by one later to be revealed as a child abuser is a shattering experience. Obviously the bishops can never have experienced this. We don’t know what intellectual qualities have been discovered in them by the Vatican diplomats who choose our bishops. But surely they must have enough nous to be able to understand this shattering experience. Putting known child abusers to other parishes may be the single most important reason for the loss of two generations to the Church.
It is now time, having apologised to the abused, to apologise to the rest of us. There may still be some who care enough to listen.

A Straw in the Wind? An Acorn in the Forest?

30 Sunday Aug 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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extension of ordination, Movement For Married Clergy, Scottish priests, viri probati

We believe that Christ made the Last Supper the occasion of His most powerful and important statement , namely the Eucharistic imperative.  Trying to help to carry this out is why To Feed The Flock and the other organisations like it exist.

This is why we found an article in this week’s ‘Tablet’ very encouraging. The Movement for Married Clergy surveyed parish priests throughout England and Wales, “ asking them to estimate how many married laymen known to them  were suitable candidates for ordination”.  The 62 priests who replied identified 159 ‘viri probati ‘, men of known character . MMAC feels a projection would  create a larger number.

First of all, an important feature of this is that as many as 62 priests from 300 parishes were able to accept that the Eucharist need not be provided exclusively by the Tridentine clergy, celibate, theologically well-educated and supported by a parish, although at least 238 were not. This is a spectacular breakthrough when added to the recent support for this  expressed by about 10 English  bishops, and indeed to Pope Francis’s decision in January to allow married men to be ordained .We must hope that this is the first major sign of change , while it is still not too late.

Secondly, it is a breakthrough which will be the only way of bringing the Eucharist to China’s millions when they can play a part in the future of the Church.

Thirdly, we congratulate MMAC on the response  ; our 154 emails to Scottish priests on a wider extension of ordination got no response at all .(Check back: we’ve mentioned it umpteen times)

Fourthly, we feel that the concept of ‘married laymen known to them ‘ may change. Looking round  the church at Mass in Scotland, this might just mean  a stifling combination of old ordained celibates and old ordained married  parish worthies. We don’t just hope for extended ordination, but ordination extended to the  two lost generations. This is a cavil, and an important one, but one which cannot overshadow the significance of MMAC’s  enterprise.

We won’t dignify this trivial cavil by calling it ‘Fifthly’, but the expressions ‘married clergy’ or worse still ‘married priest’ tend to bring us out in a rash .’Married  priest’  for some seems inevitably to bring to mind children’s jammy fingers among the chasubles , bell, book and candle for recalcitrant mothers in law, or as was seen recently in a Filipino newspaper, a correspondent’s reluctance to tolerate  the priest’s wife on the altar accepting the Offertory Collections. We find these expressions a roadblock to any rational discussion on extending ordination, but we appreciate that a graduated response is necessary at the moment.

Once again, our congratulations to MMAC  !   Mighty oaks from little acorns grow, although theirs is a fairly substantial acorn.

Scottish clerical child abuse 2006-2012

23 Sunday Aug 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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Canon Law, clerical abuse, ecclesiastical myopia

This week the McLellan Report was published. For the benefit of overseas readers, it was an independent review into the child protection procedures inside the Catholic Church in Scotland. There were 46 child abuse offences committed attributable to the Church between 2006 and 2012. The Commission dealt with this very efficiently and objectively. But as the international magazine ‘The Tablet’ points out , ‘it is in effect a vote of no confidence in the Scottish bishops’ safeguarding procedures based on their performances so far.’
For the benefit of those who wish to read it, it can be found in full on the internet under ‘McLellan Commission Scotland’. We owe our thanks to the internet, of course, since it easily provides us with the full information which in a different era might have been felt too difficult or complex for the ordinary non-clerical offertory-collection paying Catholic in the pews to understand , lacking as they do the intellectual ballast of five or six years of theological education, or simply just not being Tridentine priests.
The Tablet wonders if there are ‘deeper questions’ to be answered. ‘Why were some priests tempted to abuse children, and why did they think they could get away with it ?’ it points out, The leadership of the Catholic Church in Scotland has to be accountable to its members. That journey has hardly begun.’
This is absolutely accurate. It will be an interesting journey, from which we hope our bishops will profit while there is still Catholicism in Scotland. It will involve ‘vocation’ and how the assessment of this alleged reason for becoming a Catholic priest allowed paedophiles to do so. It will also have to involve why cover-ups were so important , Scandal is an obvious first answer, but not the only one. Given Scotland’s recent catalogue of clerical sexual adventurism, it will also have to involve the matter of to whom they were so important.
And this journey- at last- will have to be made without any irrelevant protection from that old stand-by , Canon Law. Cardinal Vincent Nichols told the Commission :’Not only the culture of the Church but even aspects of Canon Law may have led to the protection of priests.’
It would be nice if it were revealed also how bishops got the way they are. We think that’s inevitable. And we will certainly provide what observations we can about that.
Signs of a new perception of what the Church should be locally- or everywhere else -in 2015 ? Come on- pull yourself together !
Despite the Pope’s suggestions, despite the views of ten bishops from England and Wales, despite the observations of a number of very respectable websites, it was announced that the Archdiocese of Glasgow will begin a Vocations Drive for the Tridentine priesthood in October this year.
And so it goes on. Or can it ?

Elastoplast Evangelism

10 Monday Aug 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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Pope Francis asked us last week to look at divorce through the eyes of children. It would also be instructive to look at our Scottish bishops through the eyes of children, if you like, but more importantly through the eyes of those between twenty and nowadays about sixty. No teenagers of course, who see only old men with funny hats. (for cardinals, make that Italianate old men with spectacles and funny hats).
It’s quite a sight. Firstly, there’s the Elastoplast Evangelists, like the Bishops of Aberdeen, Dunkeld and Galloway . Import clerics from anywhere you can find them, even India in the case of Dunkeld. Anything to keep the status quo , and the position of the Tridentine priest going, with its devastating effect on the provision of the Eucharist throughout the world. Two of them have told us it’s because Scotland is now “a mission country”. Nobody seems to have asked them why.
In the Central Belt, we have Bishop Toal and CurryPowderGate , together with the suppression of a book,and the author punished by a church court. The teenagers will know all about Edinburgh and Cardinal O’Brien .
Archbishop Cushley and Bishop Keenan are, rather belatedly ,reviving devotion to Margaret Sinclair and Our Lady of Paisley , but not with any obvious practical attempt to relate this to providing the Eucharist for those who do not have it, despite the Pope’s suggestions. Archbishop Tartaglia will be busy later on this year with the vocations drive. That’s right.
One can look for cultural parallels to explain this entire situation. There is drama and a certain misguided sense of glory in the captain going down with the ship. Normally, however, this occurs when the crew and passengers have been rescued.
There is another cultural parallel. Sunni hate Shiites . The former feel it didn’t matter who took over after Mahomet; the latter disagree. This has produced the phenomenon of the suicide bomber. Each side’s suicide bombers feel spiritually both justified and glorified by eliminating hundreds of the other at a bus-stop.
It is difficult to find any kind of spiritual justification or glory in bishops not acting on the Pope’s advice to ask for ordination to be extended. It is an actuarial fact that failure to do this will put a bomb under the Church as we know it, both here and throughout the world.
Why cannot our episcopal suicide bombers give us their rationale ? Even the most demented suicide bomber has a reason , of a kind. We suspect our bishops will already have a place in history, however close to the Reformation the parallels may be. It would be at least amusing to find out what they think they are doing.

Time To Take A Hint time

02 Sunday Aug 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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a bishop's life, Christ's Eucharistic imperative, Sunday Sermons

As you would have heard , because St Mark’s Gospel is the shortest, it will be supplemented on Sundays during the Church’s cycle this ecclesiastical year  by the Eucharistic passages from St John.

The new cycle of the Church’s year is going to supplement the rather short Gospel of St Mark with extended commentary on the Eucharistic passages of St John.                 Although mind you it’s going to highlight the importance of the Eucharist even more than the prayer life of the Church does normally .

We’ve got to have some sympathy for our fellow Catholics here. Some ordinary Catholics don’t seem to think thousands of their fellow-Catholics, at present deprived of the Eucharist through the failure of the present method of providing it, really deserve It , otherwise they would be joining in the appeals to change things. Some priests – or actually about 150 round about this country-seem to feel the same . Well, they don’t say anything either. And we’ve asked them .

The lengthy emphasis we are promised on the Eucharistic passages from St John, however, must hit our bishops hardest of all.  They’ll have to concentrate really hard all week on the important things that they really have to worry about, despite this constant Sunday harping on the Eucharist and what Our Lord says about It  being such  a distraction .

If you think about it, it’s going to be really burdensome for them. Some of them might actually feel they should  listen to what the Pope has said about the extension of ordination. No, let’s be reasonable !

As has been said, anyway,  it’s tough at the top.

No Prayers, Please.

21 Tuesday Jul 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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paedophile prayers

What’s difficult to explain to young people ? Not much, thanks to the internet.
What’s difficult to explain to young people who want nothing to do with the priesthood , even if they don’t want an excuse to join in the lifestyle of their non-Catholic peers?
Above all, surely, there is the horrifically blood-curdling and nauseating assurance from failed priests that they can be assured of their prayers.
Go to a First Communion service, and watch all those lovely wee persons go to accept the Body and Blood of Christ, their love and trust shining in their faces. Imagine how they must feel years later as they discover that the priest who gave them the Host is revealed as a mere paedophile, the one type of criminal considered beneath all others in prison, by even the worst of prisoners. Then to have their idealism flung in their faces by the assurance that they are “remembered in their prayers” by these deviants.
Why do the deviant clergymen do this? Is it simply cynical derision ? Or is it the bitterness and despair of a failed, aberrant existence ,and by poisoning the concept of prayer, a final rejection of Christ ?
Who knows? To be charitable, are not these “prayers” an inevitable symptom of a defective vision of the priesthood, an enduring , invincible vision of the priesthood as a special mark , not to be removed even by the sordid details of paedophily, apparently a mere blip in the passage of a Tridentine priest through life ?
This is the real problem, and in its way even more terrifying than the sordid betrayal of the idealism of our young people by individual priests.
The Tridentine priesthood in particular has built an ethos about itself as part of the very fibre of the Church over the last thousand years .
How can we bring it home to our Tridentine bishops and to our Tridentine priests that their time has come – and has gone. The celibate priest can obviously find a home in the religious orders, on whom the Church must depend yet again.
It is time for them all to realise that valid ordination must be extended beyond the celibate clergyman supported by a parish to the parishioners themselves if the Flock all over the world are to be energised and invigorated by a new method of bringing the Body and Blood of Christ to them as He asked.
We ask, as we continue to do – what is the problem in doing this ?
Why are people having to live without the Eucharist ?

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